Navigation

Friday, May 20, 2011

Saturday Stats: Largest Public Companies in San Jose

Earlier this month the San Jose Business Journal published a list of the largest public companies in Silicon Valley based on revenue. I've pulled out the ones from San Jose along with their rank and latest fiscal year revenues:
  • Cisco Systems (#4) - $40.04 billion
  • eBay (#8) - $9.6 billion
  • Sanmina-SCI Corp (#13) - $6.32 billion
  • Adobe (#21) - $3.8 billion
  • SunPower (#29) - $2.22 billion
  • Brocade Communications (#32) - $2.09 billion
  • Altera (#34) - $1.95 billion
  • Xilinx (#35) - $1.83 billion
  • Atmel (#38) - $1.64 billion
  • Fairchild Semiconductor (#39) - $1.60 billion
  • Novellus Systems (#44) - $135 billion
  • Verifone (#50) - $1 billion
  • Cadence (#51) - $935.95 million
  • Atheros (#52) - $926.83 million
  • Netgear (#53) - $902.05 million
  • Cypress Semiconductor (#54) - $877.53 million
  • Super Micro Computer (#57) - $721.44 million
  • Quantum (#58) - $681.43 million
  • Integrated Device Technology (#69) - $535.91 million
  • California Water Services (#74) - $460.40 million
  • Harmonic (#75) - $423.34 million
  • Oclaro (#80) - $392.55 million
  • Tessera (#91) - $301.39 million
  • Micrel (#92) - $297.37 million
  • Integrated Silicon Solution (#95) - $252.46 million
  • DSP Group (#98) - $225.48 million
You can also find a filterable version of this data right over here. Of the 100 companies in Silicon Valley (including Santa Cruz County, San Mateo County, and parts of Alameda County), 26% of the companies were based in San Jose. The total revenue from just the San Jose companies exceeded $81 billion!

6 comments:

  1. How many are in downtown?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Off the top of my head I can only think of 1, Adobe.

    However, at least 10 of them are on North 1st Street, which will hopefully become Downtown #2 very soon, and is easily accessible on Lightrail from Downtown.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Downtown #2? Seriously? It is posts like these that make San Jose look like a Sunnyvale or a Mountain View and make me want to move to SF.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Not quite sure what you mean. There is a vision to make 1st street a mixed use, transit-oriented zone that will flow into Downtown. Nothing wrong with that.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Mixed use/transit oriented sounds so much better than downtown #2 :)

    SJ should first make sure the core of the city is vibrant and healthy. One key part of this is to incentivize companies to set up shop in downtown SJ before spreading to other parts. But beggars can't be choosers I guess - with the fiscal crisis etc.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'm with anonymous! It's one thing to be supportive of downtown and thats great, but there is absolutely no direction, vision or leadership provided by the city government or civic organizations. Why there would even be a focus outside of the sad little downtown-proper core baffles me. How many of the "downtown 2" company should have/could have been incentivized to move downtown?

    ReplyDelete